Classroom Experience Archives - Microsoft Industry Blogs - United Kingdom http://approjects.co.za/?big=en-gb/industry/blog/tag/classroom-experience/ Mon, 08 Feb 2021 14:54:12 +0000 en-US hourly 1 How to deliver safe and productive hybrid learning for students http://approjects.co.za/?big=en-gb/industry/blog/education/2021/02/09/safe-and-productive-hybrid-learning/ http://approjects.co.za/?big=en-gb/industry/blog/education/2021/02/09/safe-and-productive-hybrid-learning/#comments Tue, 09 Feb 2021 07:00:08 +0000 Get tips, resources and advice how to use technology to deliver safe and productive hybrid learning for students.

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The past few months have been extremely busy for all of Education across the UK. With everyone taking part in remote or hybrid learning, it’s important teachers and IT teams ensure they have the right settings in place so students and colleagues can easily access the lessons, resources, and information they need. It’s also important to ensure we keep them and the data safe so they can learn in secure environments.

We get some regular questions from teachers and IT teams that we have summarised below, plus you can get more tips in our Keeping students safe while using Teams for distance learning guide.

  1. How do I manage access to my Channel meeting?
  2. How do I stop others joining my online lessons?
  3. How do I mute my students during a lesson?
  4. How do I remove someone from a meeting?
  5. How do I get approved external people to join my meetings or classes?
  6. How can I download an attendance list?
  7. How do I manage my meeting?
  8. How do I let a student present during an online class?
  9. How do I record my class?
  10. As an IT admin, how can I get a policy guide?

1. How do I manage access to my Channel meeting?

You can make changes to your meetings via the Meeting options button. There are three ways to do this for scheduled meetings:

  • In Teams, go to Calendar, select a meeting, and then Meeting options.
  • In a meeting invitation, select Meeting options.
  • During a meeting, select Show participants in the meeting controls. Then, above the list of participants, choose Manage permissions.

A screenshot of meeting options from Microsoft Teams
An image still from a video on how to set up meeting options

We recommend you set up the lobby option, to help manage the next often-asked question.

2. How do I stop others joining my online lessons?

Using the lobby and the features around joining meetings with students is the best way to stop unauthorised people joining online lessons. The lobby can be enforced at an administrator level and or through individual meetings.

By requiring participants to sign into Teams before they join a meeting, you can recognise who is joining the meeting and if they should be allowed.

Staff can also control chat settings as they need to. You can control the chat settings in channel meetings, including blocking, deleting and muting.

To block, navigate to the channel thread for your meeting. Select the Format button and change Everyone can reply to You and moderators can reply.

A screenshot of chat options from Microsoft Teams

To delete messages, you can right-click and delete the messages. Your IT administrator needs to grant you the correct permissions to do this.

If a student is disruptive or behaving inappropriately in class conversations, you can mute them. To do this, Select More Options on your Team’s tile, the Manage team. Select the Members tab, then select the checkmark box under Mute Students.

A screenshot of More Options for classes from Microsoft Teams

3. How do I mute my students during a lesson?

Let students know that you’re muting their audio, then from the participants list, click Mute all.

A screenshot of the Participant's List from Microsoft Teams

To prevent students from unmuting, select More options next to Participants Don’t allow attendees to unmute.

An image still from a video on changing options in a Teams meeting.

4. How do I remove someone from a meeting?

Make sure you have set up the lobby feature. By doing this, you can admit only the staff and students who are supposed to be in the lesson. If you have another teacher or teaching assistant in the class, make them a presenter. They can monitor and admit students who joined late.

If a participant is accidentally admitted to the meeting or is being disruptive, you can remove them from the meeting by clicking Show participants in the call controls, right clicking on the participant, and selecting Remove participant.

Make sure you have set your lobby controls on to ensure they cannot re-join the meeting without entering the lobby first.

5. How do I get approved external people to join my meetings or classes?

There are two ways you can allow users from other organisations: external access and guest access.

External access

External users have no access to your organisation’s teams or teams resources, but they can find, call, chat, and set up meetings with you. External access is turned on by default, but your IT team may have updated the settings. To make sure external users can join your meetings and classes, you’ll need to ask IT to manage external access.

Guest access

This allows an individual user to join a team with nearly all the same capabilities as a native team member. They can chat, call, meet, and collaborate on organisation files. A guest user can be given nearly all the same Teams capabilities as a native team member. Again, you’ll have to ask IT to enable guest access in Teams.

6. How can I download an attendance list?

You may want to track student’s attendance in online classes. An easy way to do this is by downloading a meeting attendance report. Firstly, make sure your IT team have turned it on. They can do this via Manage meeting policies in Teams. Then you can download the attendance list from the Participants pane of the meeting, by clicking the download arrow.

A screenshot of downloading attendance list from Microsoft Teams

7. How do I manage my meeting?

Once you’ve managed your meeting options and started class, you can do a range of things within the meeting to make your class more interactive and fun.

Change class view

You and your students can change the class view. You can do this in More options, and choose from:

A screenshot of video viewing options on Microsoft Teams

Gallery

The default view. Useful for small meetings or breakout rooms.

Large Gallery

Allows you to see the entire class. Shows up to 49 attendees.

Together mode

Useful for reducing meeting fatigue, Together Mode is good for large discussion groups.

Spotlight mode

Spotlight mode puts the teacher on everyone’s screens, so it’s useful when you need everyone’s attention. Only teachers can turn this on and it will stay until you turn it off. To do this, click Show Participants then More Options. In the menu, choose Spotlight me.

A screenshot of the Spotlight option on Microsoft Teams

Set up breakout rooms

Breakout rooms are great for facilitating smaller discussions. Only the organiser will be able to set these. In the meeting controls, select Breakout Rooms.

A screenshot of the Breakout Room button from Microsoft Teams

From there, you can select the number of rooms, and number of users per rooms. You can choose to assign users automatically or manually.

A screenshot of Breakout Room options from Microsoft Teams

You can see more meeting options in our reference guide.

8. How do I let a student present during an online class?

If a student needs to present content during a meeting, you can promote an attendee to presenter during the meeting. To do this, open the Participants pane, then Manage permissions. In Meeting Options, you can update the Who can present option. You can also manually select attendees by right clicking on their name and selecting Make a presenter. You can turn them back into attendees the same way once they are done.

An image still from a video on setting up hard mute.

 

9. How do I record my class?

You can record classes to share with students who are away, or for them to review later. To do this follow these steps:

  1. Click on More options
  2. Press Start recording. This will notify everyone that the recording has started.
  3. To stop recording, go to More options and select Stop recording.
  4. Once the recording is processed, it’s saved on Microsoft Stream.

Once the recording is ready, you can watch it in the char or select the More Options icon to watch it on Microsoft Stream where you can enable closed captions and search the meeting transcript. You can also share the lesson with others.

An image still from a video on how to record lessons.

10. As an IT admin, how can I get a policy guide?

The Microsoft Teams for Education Policy Wizard simplifies policy management for your students and educators. You can quickly apply the most important set of policies to create a safe and productive hybrid learning experience.

Discover the Policy Wizard.

Hybrid learning resources for educators

Hybrid learning resources for parents

Find out more

Join a training event

Visit the UK Hybrid Learning Hub

Download the hybrid learning guide: Keeping students safe while using Teams for distance learning

Read more education blogs for hybrid learning tips and best practices 

About the author

Alan Crawford, a man wearing glasses and smiling at the cameraAlan has been involved in education for over 20 years, both in the classroom and as a senior leader. He moved to work for Microsoft to share best practice and empower staff and students to embrace the ever-changing digital world.

Alan thrives on helping both individuals and organisations realise the value of what they already have and how to help everyone save time through technology.

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How to deliver a balanced approach to remote learning http://approjects.co.za/?big=en-gb/industry/blog/education/2020/12/10/how-to-deliver-a-balanced-approach-to-remote-learning/ Thu, 10 Dec 2020 14:35:38 +0000 Building a rich, purposeful and clear remote learning environment will help enrich pupils and keep them, staff and parents connected.

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A mother helps her son with remote learning tasks.

Exeter Cathedral School (ECS) was founded in 1179 as a choir school. Nowadays, the School is a co-educational day and boarding school which prides itself on being a nurturing and purposeful school for some 260 pupils. Earlier this year, after the Prime Minister’s announcement that schools across the country were required to close, the School’s management team met to prepare for remote learning for the first time in the School’s 841-year history. We agreed on a three-phase approach.

  • Phase 1: Help pupils, parents and staff navigate the three remaining days of the term.
  • Phase 2: Provide immediate and long-term on-site support for key worker families.
  • Phase 3: Research, prepare and launch a home learning platform to allow for a longer-term closure.

As a small school, we are mindful of budgets and of the need to be able to develop and manage our remote learning platform in-house. All of our requirements led us to Microsoft and to Microsoft Teams. 16 days later, we launched our first ever virtual learning environment: ECS:Learning@Home.

8 principles to delivering a balanced approach to remote learning

Remote learning was new to us and to our pupils and families. We knew what we asked of them needed to be realistic, doable, worthwhile and stimulating. So, we established eight founding principles that would underpin ECS:Learning@Home.

A graphic for ECS@home remote learning platform.

Meaningful and manageable

We worked hard to set up programmes that allowed uncomplicated access to our curriculum across the age groups. We ensured that our online learning was rich, purposeful and clear.

Enriching

School is about much more than classroom learning. Through our home learning programme we were able to come together as a school for assemblies, form times, quizzes, sports days, guest speakers, Speech Day and more. This allowed us to add the important touches to a child’s day ‘at school’ and to create space for pupils to be recognised for their work and have fun with their peers.

Rigorous, balanced and flexible

We attach great importance to a broad and balanced school experience andwanted to make sure that our ‘real life’ breadth of opportunity and high standards continued to be offered remotely.

A child doing remote learning. He is laying on a bed reading his computer.

Equally, a one-size-fits-all approach was clearly not going to be good enough – each family’s circumstances were different. So we empowered pupils and parents to access our full daily offerings as they saw fit and to build in screen-free time to their routines.

Interaction

Interaction is absolutely fundamental for effective learning and teaching – and of course for first-rate pastoral care. We wanted to use a digital platform that could replicate, as closely as possible, a classroom experience. We were determined to be live, interactive, and reactive to pupils’ needs while online. Teams allowed us to do this and to achieve a coherent model of home learning and pastoral care across the school.

Creativity

And as a school which has its foundations in performance, music and spirituality, we wanted to continue to be a shining light for creativity. As well as daily wellbeing sessions run by our sports department, visual and performing arts featured heavily in our programme. Each afternoon our Creativity Hub opened up and gave our pupils access to lessons and activities in music, art and design and storytelling. We even launched ECS:Choristers@Home to keep our core strands of Choristership alive.

A day in the life of a pupil in remote learning

We streamlined the timetable so that busy families could easily keep track of the daily pattern. Every pupil started their day with live ‘morning welcome’ sessions with their form teacher and friends. This was the backbone of our online pastoral provision and allowed us to continue to be a school where people matter.

An example of a student's timetable during remote learning.

Supporting staff, parents and families

Staff training was integral to the success of remote learning. We ran training events to allow teachers to learn about Teams and provided time to practise in designated Training Huddles. All of this was, of course, done remotely! We also provided parents with a weekly evening training session.

We sent out a weekly ECS:Learning@Home update, complete with videos and snippets from the week, and – crucially – a ‘You Said, We Did’ feature: this gave parents and pupils a voice, and helped us to unify our efforts and build a cohesive home-school community committed to improvement.

Pupil and staff outcomes in remote learning

A child doing remote learning. She is sitting by a table with a computer and stationary around her.

Using Teams allowed us to keep doing what we love – coming together each day as a school community. We genuinely stayed connected and, in amongst all of the learning, had a whole lot of fun!

As a staff body we held games and quizzes, kept the banter flowing through Teams chat, and even had a lipsync battle with senior pupils. Teams also meant that our pupils were able to take their public exams. In fact, the class of 2020 equalled the School’s best-ever public exam results.

The success of our ECS:Learning@Home programme seems to have resonated locally and more widely. We currently have more enquiries than ever before from families who want to explore an ECS place for their child.

Exeter Cathedral infographic with their tips for successful remote working.

How remote learning impacts our future plans

We have now adopted a blended-learning approach to our curriculum with the support of Teams, using it to further pupils’ independent learning skills. Live speakers are now joining us for assemblies and Enrichment Talks via Teams to speak about topical issues and our Pupil Voice initiative continues to thrive digitally.

We see our blended learning approach being integral to our provision over the coming months and years – it’s here to stay.

Find out more

Discover more about ECS’s journey

Get started with hybrid learning

Learn about remote learning

About the author

James Featherstone, a man wearing a suit and tie smiling at the camera. He is outside in front of some green bushes.

James Featherstone is the Headmaster of Exeter Cathedral School. His job is to lead and manage the School, look after the team of staff, and to make sure that the 260 pupils and their families have the best possible educational journey. Before joining ECS, James was on the Senior Leadership Team at the Perse School in Cambridge.

Outside of school James enjoys singing, travelling through France (he’s a linguist by training), and doing his best to keep up with his two children on their adventures together.

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How to make engaging virtual lessons for students http://approjects.co.za/?big=en-gb/industry/blog/education/2020/07/21/create-virtual-lessons/ Tue, 21 Jul 2020 08:00:25 +0000 With PowerPoint and Microsoft Stream, you can create engaging and creative virtual lessons you can share with students in a remote learning environment.

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Virtual lessons are a great way to share content to your students, and other educators. It means your students are able to learn no matter where they are, or have the content to look back on a later date.

Sometimes, having a lesson plan is the easiest part and recorded and uploading the lesson can be daunting. But we’ve got a step-by-step guide on how to record, upload, and share your presentations.

We’ll be doing this through PowerPoint and Microsoft Stream, which makes it easy to use and accessible, with transcripts and captions.

Add narration and record your PowerPoint presentation

Screenshot of a video

 

PowerPoint has a really great feature to help you easily develop new content by adding audio narration to existing slides. This can also prove really useful for students when recording assessed presentations.

Top tip: Presentation Coach helps you prepare in private to give more engaging presentations.

1. Setting up the Recording tab in PowerPoint

Before you can use the Recording feature, you will need to make sure it’s in your main ribbon in PowerPoint.

  1. Go to File, then Options, choose the Customise Ribbon tab.
  2. On the list on the left hand side, change Popular Commands to All Tabs and find the Recording tab. Press add and it will move to your Ribbon. Press OK.
  3. On the main ribbon tab, go to Slide Show, and it should be there.

2. Recording audio narration over your slides

Once you have added the Recording tab, you can then use the Record Slide Show function. This will allow you to record audio and video, over each slide in the sequence. You can pause or stop at any time, and re-record any sections that you are not happy with.

3. Exporting your slides as a video

Once you’re happy with the audio-narrated slide content, you can then proceed with exporting it to a video. This can either be exported locally to an MP4 video file, or alternatively, published directly to your Microsoft Stream account when using Office 365.

Effectively sharing your virtual lesson on Stream

Screenshot of a video

Once you have uploaded your presentation to Stream, you will want to share them with your learners. You also might want to share other videos with colleagues or learners. These could include Microsoft Teams Meeting recordings, or other content.

The great thing about Stream is it can autogenerate captions using Automatic Speech Recognition technology. These are also available as a transcript so users can look for specific points in the video later on.

Top tip: Make your lesson more engaging by adding a quiz using Microsoft Forms.

1.      Turn on captions on your video

If you’ve already uploaded a video, you can go to the Edit Video option. Otherwise, you can do this as you’re uploading a video. In the Details section, select your supported language.

Add captions to your virtual lesson: In the Details section, select your supported language.

On the Options tab, set Autogenerate captions to On.

Add captions to your virtual lesson: On the Options tab, set Autogenerate captions to On.

It may take a while for the captions to generate – It typically takes 1-2 times the video’s duration. For example, a one hour video, could wait around two hours to finish processing.

2. Sharing an individual virtual lesson in Microsoft Stream

Once signed-in to Microsoft Stream, your video content can be found under My Content. Individual videos can be shared easily via web-link, email or embed code.

3. Curating and sharing a Channel of Stream video content

By creating a Channel in Stream, you can group related video content for easy access and viewing. This can prove particularly useful for curating collections of video-based learning resources.

4. Adding your virtual lesson to Microsoft Teams

As well as sharing your Videos and Channels using a link, email, or embed code – you can also embed content directly into Microsoft Teams. This helps maintain a streamlined experience for your learners, and ensures content is organised and accessible within the learning environment.

Creating engaging virtual lessons

By using PowerPoint and Stream, you can deliver engaging, accessible virtual lessons that you can share to your Class Teams, or share with learners and other educators. This will help create a fun, smooth learning experience for everyone, no matter where they are.

Find out more

Discover our remote learning resources

About the author

Chris Melia headshotChris is a Senior Learning Technologist at the University of Central Lancashire, and a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. Since 2018, he has led development of UCLan’s innovative and sector endorsed DigiLearn model, to recognise and reward the inclusive digital practice of academic colleagues. Widening collaboration across the sector, Chris also co-ordinates UCLan’s DigiLearn Sector – a community fostered to connect digital practitioners from across HE, FE, schools, and beyond. As a Microsoft Learning Consultant, Chris now works with other institutions – supporting their adoption of Microsoft technologies, to improve both staff and student outcomes. He is also producer and co-host of the EdTech Talks podcast, and you can follow him on Twitter @ChrisLearnTech.

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Empowering every student on the planet to achieve more http://approjects.co.za/?big=en-gb/industry/blog/education/2020/03/05/empowering-every-student-on-the-planet-to-achieve-more/ Thu, 05 Mar 2020 09:44:48 +0000 Schools, colleges, and universities need to evolve with technology to deliver the best learning outcomes for students and improve their digital skills.

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Male teacher stands beside two high school students sitting at desk in classroom, pointing to screen of convertible laptop folded open as tablet. The male student at center holds a tablet pen.Technological progress and innovation is happening at an unprecedented pace. It’s reshaping every aspect of our lives as humans. Everything from the way we live, work, learn and teach is changing.

This impacts the skills students need to succeed in classrooms today and in the workplaces of the future. Schools, colleges, and universities need to evolve in order to deliver the best learning outcomes for students.

As educators, you’re tasked with the critical role of equipping students with the skills they need for the future digital workplace and to be the next generation of leaders. Not only does everyone needs to learn the skills required to live and work in a world that is increasingly digital, but we need more computer science, data science, and cybersecurity skills to build future products and services.

This can seem like an impossible task at times with an increased pressure around funding and student numbers, but we see many great examples of how colleges and universities are finding smarter ways of working, enabling students to take control of their learning whilst freeing up teachers to spend more time helping them overcome challenges.

The future of work and skills

The workplace of today and the future is more collaborative, productive, and diverse. It empowers employees to work how they see best, wherever they are. Technology is an integral part of the workplace today, and as technologies like IoT and AI grow, the role of technology will also expand.

It’s important we build up student’s soft and digital skills to ensure they can walk into these roles with confidence. The World Economic Forum listed analytical thinking, innovation, active learning, creativity, problem solving, and collaboration as some of the most important emerging skills of 2022. Students will also need to be committed to lifelong learning, to ensure they re- and upskill as we make new technology gains and jobs and industries evolve and need new skills.

Empowering educators with digital skills

Students seated in a university lecture hall with a male instructor presenting an assignment in Teams at the front of the class.For students to reach their full potential, they need educators at their full potential. Teachers who develop digital skills are empowered to use technology to improve their wellbeing and work better.

Office 365 gives educators access to time-saving tools that simplify marking and makes collaboration between students and peers easy. Predictive analytics can be used to predict student performance, improve learning outcomes, and provide customised support to students who need it.

Only 38 percent of teachers feel their training has equipped them with the skills they need. Microsoft Educator Community is a hub for educators to learn and explore resources to build those skills.

Equipping educators with the tools and skills to leverage technology in the classroom will ultimately help students develop vital digital skills that will help them succeed in the future. It will also empower educators to use technology to amplify their own work to improve their wellbeing.

Technology in the classroom

Students collaborating on group project using Dell Inspiron laptop and PowerPoint with another student inking in Word.49 percent of teachers surveyed by us said that technology made a positive impact on student-teacher collaboration. One of these tools – Microsoft Teams is helping schools increase both peer-to-peer and student-teacher collaboration.

At City of Westminster College, the use of Teams empowered students to take responsibility for their own learning and encouraged collaboration amongst learners. Learning extends beyond the classroom, with teachers posting resources that students can view at any time – whether in class or studying at home. It’s also helped eliminate communication barriers faced by students with hearing impairments.

I’m incredibly proud of the work our customers are doing with our technology to support a learning environment that is both accessible and inclusive.

Over the next three years we have committed to train 30,000 teachers on how technology can help build an inclusive classroom, with our free built-in and non-stigmatising learning tools. Immersive reader, for example, helps students with dyslexia by reading out text, breaking words into syllables and increasing spacing between lines and letters.

Stronger together

As an education community, we all have a huge opportunity and responsibility to prepare students for a digital future and continued change. Join in on our sessions at Digifest or pop by our stand to discover how we’re helping other educators use technology to transform student and teacher outcomes.

Find out more

Help your students prepare for their careers

Discover more education blogs from Microsoft

About the author

Chris Rothwell headshotChris is the Director of Education at Microsoft UK.  He and his team work with education customers helping them make the most of technology to save time and increase the impact of teaching and learning.

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